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Geotechnical Aspects of Dam Safety

William Empson, PE, PMP Senior Levee Safety Program Risk Manager U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Risk Management Center William.B.Empson@usace.army.mil Dam Safety Workshop Brasília, Brazil 20-24 May 2013. Geotechnical Aspects of Dam Safety. Geotechnical Aspects of Dam Safety Topics.

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Geotechnical Aspects of Dam Safety

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  1. William Empson, PE, PMP Senior Levee Safety Program Risk Manager U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Risk Management Center William.B.Empson@usace.army.mil Dam Safety Workshop Brasília, Brazil 20-24 May 2013 Geotechnical Aspects of Dam Safety

  2. Geotechnical Aspects of Dam SafetyTopics • Concrete Dams • To be presented by Structural Instructor • Earth and Rock Fill Dams • Failure modes • Seepage • Filters • Stability • Emergency Spillways • Erosion

  3. Geotechnical Aspects of Concrete DamsFailure Modes • Foundation Leakage, Piping 11 • Overtopping 9 • Deterioration 6 • Flow Erosion 3 • Gate Failure 3 • Sliding 2 • Deformation 2 • Faulty Construction 2 *Lessons From Dam Incidents, ASCE/USCOLD 1975

  4. Geotechnical Aspects of Concrete Dams-Foundation Piping

  5. Geotechnical Aspects of Concrete Dams-Uplift Pressure

  6. Geotechnical Aspects of Concrete Dams-Flow Erosion

  7. Geotechnical Aspects of Concrete Dams-Sliding

  8. Geotechnical Aspects of Concrete Dams-Foundation Improvements

  9. Geotechnical Aspects of Concrete Dams-Arch Dam Abutments

  10. Geotechnical Aspects of Dam SafetyTypes of Embankment Dams • Earth Fill • Hydraulic Fill • Homogenous Rolled Fill • Zoned Rolled Fill • Rock fill • Diaphragm Rock Fill • Central Core Rock Fill

  11. Geotechnical Aspects of Dam SafetyTypes of Embankment Dams

  12. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth Dams- Hydraulic Fill Dam

  13. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth DamsFailure Modes Cause Failures Incidents Total Embankment Piping 23 14 37 Foundation Piping 11 43 54 Overtopping 18 7 25 Flow Erosion 14 17 31 Sliding 5 28 33 Deformation 3 29 32 Slope Protection Damage 0 13 13 Deterioration 2 3 5 Gate Failure 1 3 4 Earthquake Instability 0 3 3 Faulty Construction 0 3 3

  14. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth DamsFailure Modes (Cont.) • Piping • Along outlet conduits • Through cracks across the impervious core • Inadequately compacted core material at contact with uneven surfaces • In zones susceptible to erosion within the foundation • Overtopping • Inadequate spillway capacity • Large, rapid landslides in the reservoir • Too little freeboard

  15. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth DamsFailure Modes (Cont.) • Slope Failure • Design deficiencies • Neglected remedial actions • Instability • Excessive deformations • Excessive stresses • Excessive loss of materials due to erosion

  16. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth DamsFailure Modes (Cont.) • Earthquake conditions • Excessive deformation • Excessive pore pressure buildup • Sudden densification of loose, saturated, non-cohesive soils that causes rapid build-up of pore fluid pressures

  17. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth DamsTechnical Requirements • Dam and foundation must be sufficiently watertight and have adequate seepage control for safe operation • Must have “sufficient spillway and outlet capacity” as well as “adequate freeboard” to prevent over topping by the reservoir • Must be stable under all loading conditions

  18. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth Dams Seepage • Seepage through the foundation or abutments causing piping or solutioning of rock • Seepage through embankments, along conduits, or along abutment contacts causing piping or internal erosion

  19. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth Dams Through Seepage

  20. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth Dams Milford Dam, KS

  21. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth Dams Foundation Seepage

  22. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth Dams- Hodges Village Dam - Seepage

  23. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth DamsPiping Into Voids

  24. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth DamsSink Hole, Clearwater Dam, MO

  25. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth DamsInternal Drains

  26. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth Dams Blanket Drain Exit Embankment Gravel swale Blanket Drain Foundation Proper configuration – facilitates free drainage

  27. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth DamsBlocked Drain Exit Embankment Swale Blanket Drain Foundation Improper configuration – blocks drainage

  28. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth Dams- Uplift in Rock and Seepage

  29. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth Dams Seepage Reduction Measures

  30. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth DamsToe Drains and Relief Wells

  31. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth DamsEmergency Repairs

  32. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth Dams Emergency Repair for Boils i = h / l

  33. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth Dams Conduits Seepage collars – designers thought they would stop seepage

  34. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth DamsFilter Design • Facilitates the controlled flow of water and prevents movement of soil particles • Collection and control • Adequate carrying capacity • Prevents migration of fines • Criteria • Permeability • Stability

  35. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth DamsSlope Stability • Type slopes • Embankment slopes • Cut slopes • Reservoir rim slopes • Failure modes • Shallow Slide • Deep Slide • Wedge (Block) Slide

  36. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth Dams Shallow Slide

  37. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth DamsShallow Slide

  38. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth DamsDeep Slide

  39. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth Dams Waco Dam, TX

  40. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth DamsAbutment Slide, Libby Dam, MT Reservoir Rim Slides

  41. Geotechnical Aspects of Earth DamSpillway ErosionPainted Rock Dam, AZ

  42. Earthquake Aspects of Dam Safety

  43. 4 3 2 1 0 Earthquakes & Dams • 162 COE dams in high seismic areas (2 and above) subject to damage • Most built in 1940’s and 1950’s with no seismic design • Seismic design for liquefaction came into practice in the late 1970’s early 1980’s Location of Embankment Dams Seismic Zones Low hazard to life & property High hazard to life & property

  44. Earthquake Engineering Seismic dam safety becomes a priority Near failure of Lower San Fernando Dam San Fernando Earthquake - 1971

  45. Earthquake Size Intensity Scale Damage based Modified Mercalli I-XII Magnitude Scales (Instrumental) Energy based Richter M 1-9 Local ML Surface Wave Ms Moment Mw

  46. Comparison of earthquake energy release to the seismic energy yield of quantities of the explosive TNT Richter TNT for Seismic Example MagnitudeEnergy Yield (approximate) -1.5 6 ounces Breaking a rock on a lab table 1.0 30 pounds Large Blast at a Construction Site 1.5 320 pounds 2.0 1 ton Large Quarry or Mine Blast 2.5 4.6 tons 3.0 29 tons 3.5 73 tons 4.0 1,000 tons Small Nuclear Weapon 4.5 5,100 tons Average Tornado (total energy) 5.0 32,000 tons 5.5 80,000 tons Little Skull Mtn., NV Quake, 1992 6.0 1 million tons Double Spring Flat, NV Quake, 1994 6.5 5 million tons Northridge, CA Quake, 1994 7.0 32 million tons Hyogo-Ken Nanbu, Japan Quake, 1995; Largest Thermonuclear Weapon 7.5 160 million tons Landers, CA Quake, 1992 8.0 1 billion tons San Francisco, CA Quake, 1906 8.5 5 billion tons Chilean Quake, 1960 10.0 1 trillion tons (San-Andreas type fault circling Earth) 12.0 160 trillion tons (Fault Earth in half through center) 160 trillion tons of dynamite is a frightening yield of energy. Consider, however, that the Earth receives that amount in sunlight every day.

  47. New Madrid Earthquakes, 1811-1812 (Isoseismals)

  48. Earthquake Effects • Transient loading or shaking • Changes material properties • Settlement • Liquefaction • Permanent ground displacement • Dynamic response • Each thing has it own shaking response

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